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IHS: Deep learning taking analytics to new levels

According to a research note from Oliver Philippou, senior analyst, video surveillance, IHS Markit, video analytics is still in the process of shedding the poor reputation it earned from over-promising and under-delivering, but is beginning to capitalize on technical accomplishments offered by deep-learning.

July 26, 2017  By Staff


The note states:

Deep learning appears to be able to offer a level of accuracy and reliability in object and behaviour classification that not only enables video analytics finally to deliver on some of the lofty – but as yet unrealised – claims made in the past, but pushes capabilities far beyond them. Broadly speaking, there are two main areas in which deep learning analytics offer great benefits over the technology that has preceded it. They are:

Accuracy
A long-held complaint levelled against traditional analytics products was that their algorithms were unable to distinguish between objects and behaviours that a human being would have no problem classifying. This deficiency in computer vision algorithms results either in missed security breaches or false alarms. The ability of deep learning algorithms to view a scene intuitively, as a human viewer would, means that detection accuracy increases dramatically while false alarm rates fall. Neural networks allow a computer to apply a series of assessments to a given situation. This is an important development for the video analytics industry. Although some end users may not need an analytics solution that is 100 per cent accurate 100 per cent of the time, many use cases require the security system to be as close to infallible as possible. Users in the critical infrastructure sector, for instance, cannot afford to miss a breach in security, and can spend a large amount of money investigating false alarms. Deep learning algorithms have shown they can learn to achieve 99.9 per cent accuracy in certain tasks, where conventional systems would struggle to achieve 95 per cent. In many security use cases, these few percentage points make all the difference.

Power
Not only has deep learning demonstrated its capacity to increase radically the effectiveness of a computer to reliably classify objects and behaviour, it also is making possible the processing and analysis of increasing volumes of video footage in a fraction of the time required of earlier analytics. Companies such as Avigilon, Qognify, and IronYun now are marketing analytics that leverage deep learning to turn vast amounts of video footage into usable information in a fraction of the time it would have taken in the past. Video processing software that allows users to interact with their surveillance footage using a Google-like interface and natural language search terms drastically reduces the time it takes to find relevant video footage in an archive that might store video from thousands of feeds.

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Facial recognition is an area that has benefited greatly from deep learning architecture. Indeed, most facial recognition analytics on the market today feature some kind of deep learning. Not only does deep learning increase the accuracy of facial recognition sensors, it also enables faces to be identified in larger and more crowded scenes. In the wake of recent terrorist attacks in crowded locations, this capability could radically change the whole approach to security monitoring, allowing law enforcement to track suspects with far greater speed and efficiency. Herta is one company that specialises in facial recognition in large crowds.


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